University of New South Wales Faculty of Law Research Series

University of New South Wales Faculty of Law Research Series 2008

 

Deadly Currents Beneath Calm Waters: Persons with Disability and the Right to Life in Australia

Phillip French, University of New South Wales
Rosemary Kayess, University of New South Wales

Article comments

A shorter version of this article is published as P French and R Kayess, “Deadly Currents Beneath Calm Waters: Persons with Disability and the Right to Life in Australia” in L. Clements and J Read (eds) Disabled People and the Right to Life: The Protection and Violation of Disabled People’s Most Basic Human Rights, OUP, Routledge (forthcoming 2008). This paper may also be referenced as [2008] UNSWLRS 34.

Abstract

Australia has traditionally considered itself to be in the forefront of nations committed to the recognition and respect of human rights, including the right to life of all human beings. Australia has signed and ratified the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which codifies the right to life in international law. Australia has also signed and ratified the Convention on the Rights of the Child, which codifies both the right to life, and a related right to survival and development, for all children and young persons. Additionally, Australia is a wealthy country with relatively well-developed health and social security systems, which include a wide range of specialist services targeted specifically to persons with disability and their families. Together, these factors would appear to provide a strong foundation for securing the rights to life and survival of Australians with disability. However, beneath these calm waters lie deadly currents.

This essay analyses the degree to which Australians with disability effectively enjoy the right to life, as it is understood in international law. We adopt an expansive understanding of the right to life that views the right to life as far more than an obligation on states to merely prevent and punish arbitrary deprivation of life, as important as this is. Instead, we argue that the right to life requires states to pursue a range of positive legal, social and economic measures to ensure that this right is fully realised, especially in a disability context. We argue that the rights to life and survival for persons with disability cannot be effectively secured without some transformation of traditional understandings of these rights, and we examine the potential for the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities to effect such a transformation.

Subject Area

Human Rights Law

Recommended Citation

Phillip French and Rosemary Kayess, "Deadly Currents Beneath Calm Waters: Persons with Disability and the Right to Life in Australia" (May 2008). University of New South Wales Faculty of Law Research Series. University of New South Wales Faculty of Law Research Series 2008. Working Paper 34.
http://law.bepress.com/unswwps/flrps08/art34

No readers' reactions have been posted for this article. To submit one, copy the URL for this article (http://law.bepress.com/unswwps/flrps08/art34) and click here.